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Technology Stocks : Aspect Telecommunications (ASPT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sunil Veluvali who wrote (921)4/18/1999 3:29:00 PM
From: corporal spewchunks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2018
 
Don't know. I'm just running it up the information pole and seeing if anyone will salute it ie. will tell all of us what it means.



To: Sunil Veluvali who wrote (921)4/18/1999 5:21:00 PM
From: corporal spewchunks  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 2018
 
Maybe this is the kind of site they have in mind:























March 1999
IP Telephony Enters the Realm of Retail

Joe Fleischer

Will IP telephony win over the masses in 1999 as on-line shopping did at the end of 1998? Here's how long-distance carrier IDT plans to make IP telephony and Web callback mainstream by introducing a Web site where surfers can reach live agents at some of the world's best-known retailers.


A new Web site, www.easysurf.com, lets Web surfers make IP telephony calls or Web callback requests to call centers at companies that include 800-FLOWERS, Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, Godiva, IBM Internet Connection Services, Lands' End and MicroWarehouse.
The site debuted in February under the auspices of IDT (Hackensack, NJ; 888-872-1230; www. idt.net), a long-distance phone company. IDT offers IP telephony software and services through its Net2Phone subsidiary.

IDT introduced its first consumer IP telephony service, also called Net2Phone, in summer 1996. The Net2Phone service lets Web surfers make IP telephony calls from PCs to regular phones. The first time surfers make calls through Net2Phone, they download software from www.net2phone.com, Net2Phone's Web site. IDT deducts the cost of each IP telephony call from the surfer's Net2Phone account.

Surfers who fund their Net2Phone accounts with credit cards can complete on-line forms from a secure portion of Net2Phone's Web site; print, fill out and fax forms to IDT; or provide credit card info to IDT agents over the phone. If they prefer not to use credit cards, they can pay by check or money wire.

Last April, IDT introduced Click2Talk, a corporate version of the Net2Phone service that lets companies place Click2Talk icons throughout their Web sites. Surfers click on the icons to use the Net2Phone service to reach call centers from their PCs. Agents answer these calls from regular phones. Lands' End and 800-FLOWERS are among the high-profile firms that began using Click2Talk from their Web sites late last year.

The Click2Talk service offers additional options to businesses besides IP telephony. One of them is letting surfers conduct live chat sessions with agents, including secure sessions where surfers identify themselves by typing in passwords. Another option is enabling agents to push Web pages, files or electronic documents to surfers. A third is allowing an on-line retailer to incorporate data from a surfer's Net2Phone account into its own order entry system. This eliminates the need for on-line shoppers to repeat the same information to every firm they transact with from www.easysurf.com.

Click2Talk is one of three services on-line merchants can use to let surfers reach their call centers from www.easysurf.com. The other two are Click2CallMe, a Web callback service, and Click2Mail, which lets surfers send an e-mail message to a call center's primary e-mail address (e.g., salescompany.com).

Click2CallMe lets visitors to a company's Web site fill out an on-line form to schedule a regular phone call or request an immediate call to a specific number. When Click2CallMe places a call to a customer in response to his request, it doesn't route him directly to an agent. Instead, it dials the toll-free number of the company whose Web site he visited.

Let's say a customer uses Click2CallMe to schedule a call from 800-FLOWERS to his home number. When the customer receives the call, Click2CallMe gives him a choice before it connects him with 800-FLOWERS. An IVR menu from IDT asks him if he wishes to accept the call, reject the call or not receive any more calls through Click2CallMe. If he accepts the call, Click2CallMe directs him to 800-FLOWERS' ubiquitous toll-free number.

Although surfers with one phone line don't have to disconnect from the Internet when using Click2Talk, they do have to disconnect to receive calls through Click2CallMe.

Companies that choose not to use IDT's Web callback or IP telephony services can e-mail a request to IDT to be listed on www.easysurf.com, which has a search engine for locating on-line retailers. Each listing has a link to a company's home page and indicates its mailing address and main phone number. Other information companies can provide in their listings includes whether they:

offer ways to reach their call centers directly from www.easysurf.com;
are currently announcing any special deals;
have multilingual sites;
let customers use payment methods other than credit cards;
ship internationally or only within the US; and
offer on-line tracking of orders.
Besides offering PC-to-phone IP telephony services, IDT also provides a service called Net2Phone Direct that lets people make domestic and international phone-to-phone calls from the US over an IP network. Since these calls don't originate from Web surfers, the service is not offered from www.easysurf.com, but information about it is available from Net2Phone's Web site.

Jordan Katz, director of Net2Phone Interactive, a division of Net2Phone, believes that firms with a wide variety of products available on-line (e.g., catalog companies, manufacturers of built-to-order PCs), are best suited to use Click2Talk, because their goal is to get shoppers to call them.

Real estate and financial services companies, which are more likely to have affluent customers with multiple phone lines, may be better off with Click2CallMe, Katz says. But he points out that since Click2CallMe ultimately connects customers to toll-free numbers, which aren't necessarily reachable outside the US, Click2Talk is the preferable choice for companies looking to attract international business.

Katz says that IDT may eventually allow surfers to use money from their Net2Phone accounts to buy on-line from www.easysurf.com. Since IDT's customers can already purchase Net2Phone service through a variety of payment methods, they wouldn't be limited to using credit cards to shop on the Web.

“We have a significant customer that wires us and sends us checks,” says Katz of IDT's Net2Phone customers.

IDT plans to include an on-line currency converter for international customers who make purchases from American firms' Web sites.

Katz says that the creation of www.easysurf.com has involved some challenges, such as finding contact information for participating retailers.

“It's very hard to locate phone numbers and even e-mail addresses from Web sites,” Katz says. “Many companies are disjointed from their on-line ventures.”

The difficulty of gathering e-mail addresses is one reason that IDT lets surfers use Click2Mail, in addition to IP telephony and Web callback, to reach retailers from www.easysurf.com.

“We think we can be a bridge to e-commerce Web sites,” Katz says.

Related Articles:

Five Tips for Retaining Customers









Copyright © 1999 Miller Freeman, Inc.
A United News & Media company



To: Sunil Veluvali who wrote (921)4/20/1999 1:57:00 AM
From: corporal spewchunks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2018
 
I am pretty sure this contains the answer:







Cisco makes bid for IP-based call centers

Planned $2 billion buyout of GeoTel to provide key products, critical capabilities

By Bob Wallace
04/19/99 Cisco Systems Inc. last week announced plans to buy call center software maker GeoTel Communications Corp. for $2 billion in an effort to offer users more options for handling customers.

Today, most consumers usually dial a toll-free number to reach a call center, but Cisco hopes in the future they'll be able to contact call centers over the Internet or by calling a gateway at the company's corporate network.

Such services will require carriers to continue moving to packet-based IP networks. That's why Cisco recently shelled out almost a half-billion dollars on two start-ups that make products designed to help carriers do that.

Third-party companies will be able to develop voice, data and video applications for the platforms, which Cisco will be offering as an alternative to the proprietary private branch exchange and automatic call distributor switches now used to distribute calls at call centers.

"Some companies will want to move to an IP approach because they'll save money and won't be tied to proprietary hardware that's difficult to upgrade," said Robert Mirani, an analyst at The Yankee Group, a Boston-based consultancy. "But one big obstacle is that call centers are considered mission-critical -- and are being served by switches well today."

That situation suits Cisco and Lowell, Mass.-based GeoTel just fine for now because the latter makes Windows NT-based software that works with the top carriers' networks as well as top call center switch vendors' products. GeoTel's Intelligent Call Router packages route incoming calls to the most readily available customer service agent at any of a company's call centers.

Carriers transitioning to IP will need the advanced call-routing technology in GeoTel's software to bring newer IP networks up to feature-parity with today's circuit-switched carrier networks, said Lisa Pierce, an analyst at Giga Information Group Inc. in Cambridge, Mass.

"Until the networks are equivalent featurewise, users will just hammer on their carriers for better 800 service rates," Pierce said. "They're just interested in pricing, quality and availability."

Cisco also cited the ability to support call center agents at home via the Net and teleweb technology, which allows users on a Web site to click a phone icon and be linked to a call center agent, as an area of interest.






Copyright © 1999 Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved. Legal notices and trademark attributions